Role of cognitive impairment and malnutrition as determinants of quality of life in patients with systemic sclerosis

D. Benfaremo, N. Pacenti, Ilaria Paterno, Cristina Dichiara, Federica Lucia Galli, G. Moroncini
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Abstract

Increasing evidence supports the presence of cognitive impairment in patients with systemic sclerosis. Malnutrition is a well-known severe complication of systemic sclerosis and is a consequence of multiple factors, mainly oropharyngeal and gastrointestinal involvement. Recent studies have shown a link between nutrition and cognitive decline in several chronic diseases. Thus, we decided to evaluate a possible association between malnutrition and cognitive impairment in patients with systemic sclerosis. In total, 100 consecutive systemic sclerosis patients were enrolled in a cross-sectional study to assess clinical and demographic features, nutritional status (body mass index, Global Leadership Initiative on Malnutrition criteria), gastrointestinal involvement (University of California Los Angeles Gastrointestinal Scale 2.0, Eat Assessment Tool 10), cognitive function (Montreal Cognitive Assessment), anxiety and depression (Patient Health Questionnaire 9, Beck Depression Inventory II), and quality of life (Short Form 36, Health Assessment Questionnaire-Disability Index, Scleroderma Health Assessment Questionnaire). Patients were stratified for the presence/absence of malnutrition and cognitive decline and compared for clinical characteristics and quality-of-life measures. Half of the patients had cognitive impairment (Montreal Cognitive Assessment < 26). These patients were older, had more comorbidities, and a significantly worse quality of life. There were no statistically significant associations with body mass index, malnutrition, and gastrointestinal involvement. About one-third of patients had clinically relevant malnutrition. They were older, had higher skin score, lung and esophageal involvement. They also showed significantly worse scores for dysphagia, gastrointestinal symptoms, functional disability, and quality of life. Gastrointestinal symptoms and dysphagia, but not body mass index and Montreal Cognitive Assessment, were significantly associated with depression scores, which in turn were negatively associated to quality-of-life measures. With regression analysis, cognitive impairment was predicted only by age, whereas malnutrition was significantly associated with age, dysphagia, and modified Rodnan skin scores. In this study, we showed that cognitive impairment and malnutrition are not directly linked but are both independently associated with greater functional disability and worse quality of life of patients with systemic sclerosis. Early recognition of these comorbidities is therefore pivotal to better address the chronic needs of patients affected by this disease.
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认知障碍和营养不良对系统硬化症患者生活质量的决定作用
越来越多的证据表明,系统性硬化症患者存在认知障碍。营养不良是众所周知的系统性硬化症的严重并发症,是多种因素(主要是口咽和胃肠道受累)共同作用的结果。最近的研究表明,营养与多种慢性疾病的认知能力下降之间存在联系。因此,我们决定评估系统性硬化症患者营养不良与认知障碍之间可能存在的关联。一项横断面研究共招募了 100 名连续的系统性硬化症患者,以评估他们的临床和人口特征、营养状况(体重指数、全球营养不良领导倡议标准)、胃肠道受累情况(加州大学洛杉矶分校胃肠道量表 2.0、饮食评估工具 10)、认知功能(蒙特利尔认知评估)、焦虑和抑郁(患者健康问卷 9、贝克抑郁量表 II)以及生活质量(简表 36、健康评估问卷-残疾指数、硬皮病健康评估问卷)。根据患者是否存在营养不良和认知功能下降对其进行分层,并对临床特征和生活质量测量进行比较。半数患者存在认知障碍(蒙特利尔认知评估 < 26)。这些患者年龄较大,合并症较多,生活质量明显较差。与体重指数、营养不良和胃肠道受累没有明显的统计学关联。约三分之一的患者存在临床相关的营养不良。他们年龄较大,皮肤评分较高,肺部和食道受累。他们在吞咽困难、胃肠道症状、功能障碍和生活质量方面的得分也明显较低。胃肠道症状和吞咽困难与抑郁评分明显相关,但体重指数和蒙特利尔认知评估与之无关,而抑郁评分又与生活质量测量呈负相关。通过回归分析,认知障碍仅可由年龄预测,而营养不良则与年龄、吞咽困难和改良罗德南皮肤评分显著相关。在这项研究中,我们发现认知功能障碍和营养不良并无直接联系,但两者都与系统性硬化症患者功能障碍的增加和生活质量的下降有独立联系。因此,及早识别这些合并症对于更好地满足该病患者的慢性需求至关重要。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.10
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0.00%
发文量
31
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